It can be. The noun pool refers to a swimming structure, a billards game, or a betting method.
The verb "pool" can mean to gather in one place (puddle) or to create shared resources (combine).
Examples:
The spilled liquid will pool around the drain.
We must pool our money to fix the sidewalk.
Adjectives and adverbs have comparative forms. Nouns and verbs do not. Pool may be a noun or a verb.
by the pool
No. In this question we can see who will do the action of the verb clean = they. In passive sentences and questions the doer of he verb is not always stated. A question could be: Has the swimming pool been cleaned. Notice also that the verb phrase is be + past participle. This is the passive form. In your question the verb is cleaned. (no be verb).
swam
yes, swimming is a verb. A verb is a doing word and hence, you can swim.
Boys is plural, so the correct conjugation of the verb is are.The boy in the pool is getting cold.The boys in the pool are getting cold.
After work I relax at home with my family. On the weekend we relaxed by the pool.
The verb 'swam' is the past tense of the verb to swim.Examples:I can swim the length of this pool.I once swam the length of this pool four times in a row.
If you are referring to a swimming pool then German translations are: Schwimmbad Schwimmbecken Freibad Hallenbad It can also, depending on context, be translated as Lache, Pfütze, Tümpel (pool of water) Spieleinsatz (poker pool) Ansammlung Pool, Poolbilliard (game of pool) As a verb: vereinen zusammenschließen ansammeln zusammenlegen bündeln
The verb 'swam' is the past tense of the verb to swim.Examples:I can swim the length of this pool.I once swam the length of this pool four times in a row.
The word "seemed" in this sentence is a verb. Specifically, it is the linking verb that connects the subject "swimming in the pool" with the predicate "desirable."
SWAM is the past tense of the verb "to swim". For example, "I swam ten laps of the pool this morning".